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tv   CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin  CNN  April 13, 2015 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT

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hour two, you're watching cnn. i'm brooke baldwin. i have to share this new audio with you, revealing what officer michael slager said immediately after shooting and killing walter scott. this first piece of audio, you'll hear officer slager speaking with another police officer. you have to listen closely. it's tough to make out some of what they're saying. toward the end of the tape, as officer slager mentions his adrenaline is pumping after firing eight bullets at the unarmed 50-year-old african-american man. >> once they get here it'll be real quick. they're going to tell you you'll be off for a couple days. they'll come back and interview you. they're not going to ask you any kind of questions right now. they'll take your weapon. we'll go from there. that's pretty much it. the last one we had, they waited a couple days to interview, an official interview, like sit down and talk about what happened. so when you get home it would
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probably be a good idea to jot down your thoughts of what happened. the adrenaline's been pumping. >> it's pumping. >> oh yeah. oh yeah. >> that's the first audio. now, we have the second piece of audio. it's actually a private phone call officer slager makes to someone we believe to be his wife. take a listen to this as he mentioned his claim scott tried to take his taser. [ phone ringing ] >> hey. hey, everything's okay. okay? i just shot somebody. yeah everything's okay. he grabbed my taser. yeah he was running from me. i'm fine. >> let's go to north charleston to my colleague nick valencia. we know protests are actually about to begin right around where you are in north charleston. what are people there most sad
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or frustrated or angry about today? >> well they're upset that it took this tape for the conversation that they say they've been having for years, in order for that dialogue to start. it took videotape for that conversation to essentially matter. so people are frustrated about that. you mentioned the demonstrations. two hours from now we're expected to have a mass demonstration here at north charleston city hall. we've already seen several protesters show up. a press conference for a similar issue related to officer slager's work history. the threat today is people calling for prosecution against this second officer seen in the tape alongside officer slager. officer clarence habersham. national bar association calling for him to be held accountable. they say he did not do enough to help walter scott and may have been complicit in a cover-up when he chose to document in his police report the version of events officer slager wrote on
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his police report. so far, no formal charges have been filed. we've reached out to to clarence habersham and his attorney. we have yet to hear back. this community very much still grieving and upset even more than a week later after 50-year-old walter scott was shot five times. >> nick thank you very much. paul ginsburg forensic audio expert who's worked with the fbi, cia, dea, homeland security with me now. he's listened closely to that first piece of audio, and i'm sure both. good to see you, sir. what did you hear? it's tough for me to really -- you hear officer slager mention his adrenaline pumping. you hear almost this nervous laughter. what else did you hear? >> other than the nervous laughter he seems like he's just ready to go out either for a drink or go home or do paperwork, whatever. he's not hyperventilating as i would expect somebody who's been in a deadly confrontation to be.
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he's talking to a colleague. the colleague, i believe, is giving him bad information in that he says we'll interview you in a few days. >> he says go home jot down some notes, some thoughts and they'll talk to you in a couple days. i was talking to a member of law enforcement for years and years last hour. he said typically what happens is that afternoon they're talking to you. >> you want to examine a crime scene immediately, and you want to interview all the witnesses separately immediately. >> i think what also strikes me just from an audio forensic perspective is you have these two different pieces of audio. are officers always aware of the fact that they're being recorded be it what they may think is a private phone call with a wife or reacting in the field with another officer? are they aware of that typically? >> they should be. the standard dash cam has two audio channels. one is from the transmitter that's worn by the officer. >> they're wearing something. >> yes. it's a transmitter.
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he can turn that on or off. the other microphone is in the dashboard of the car, inside. so he should know if he's in his cruiser that he is being recorded. whether it's talking to his wife or talking to the colleague, the other officer. >> is there any piece of either of those audio clips that you think will be paid particular attention to by a prosecutor? >> i think they will look at his demeanor in both of them as well as the fact that he knows he should know he is being recorded so that if he said i shot someone to his wife and says he was trying to get my taser, they may argue that that was being said intentionally, in effect reading it into the microphone and to be recorded. we don't know. >> okay. we don't know. we don't know a lot about this case. paul ginsburg thank you very much. just ahead here a 73-year-old reserve deputy says
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he accidently shot his gun instead of a taser when he killed the suspect here on the ground. see what happens during this entire standoff. also, a tale of two presidential hopefuls today just a day after hillary clinton made it official. a short time from now, it's marco rubio's turn. the republican florida senator just a couple hours away from his announcement in y'allmiami. but how awkward would it be for rubio facing off against his mentor jeb bush who's also expected to throw his hat in the ring? also new video surfaces of one of the most brazen jewelry heists in europe's history. when the thieves are still on the run here. we'll see everything from the break-in to the getaway. meet the world's newest energy superpower. surprised? in fact, america is now the world's number one natural gas producer... and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more oil and natural gas. supporting millions of new jobs.
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all right. you're watching cnn. i'm brooke baldwin. florida republican senator marco rubio says he's uniquely qualified to talk about america's future. in less than three hours, we're expecting him to make his white house bid official. rubio shared the news with top donors this morning. he also promoted the big announcement with this video on twitter. >> we're excited about the announcement tomorrow. tune in tomorrow at 6:00 p.m. eastern time live so you can watch or on marcorubio.com. >> okay dana bash. you're live with us in miami. i know you have the skinny on what's expected to come of this big message, the big fancy video in three hours from now. can we talk about that twitter video for a second? what was that? >> you didn't think that was fancy, doing this? >> uh no. >> you know what he's just among the people and of the
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people brooke. that's clearly what this is. no look that was odd. i didn't really get that. they also put out another video. there's just no other way to say it. they put out another video a couple days ago that was like his greatest hits of all of his speeches. so, you know they're definitely trying to kind of get into the conversation as most of the conversation to their chagrin has been about hillary clinton. so they're trying to do so, and in his 12-minute speech which is relatively short, he'll be able too much that much more eloquently. >> okay. what about just the tea party? this is the group that really helped catapult marco rubio and some others who we could be seeing throwing their hats in the ring so to speak, but they're not exactly -- it seems they're not so impressed with him anymore. >> it is very interesting because as you said counting marco rubio now by the end of
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the night, three freshmen republican senators who all came in on a tea party wave within the past five years. when it comes to rand paul and certainly when it comes to ted cruz they still very much identify with that kind of tea party ideology. marco rubio, truth be told, when he was here in florida before he got that there was this tea party movement going on he was pretty established. the speaker of the state house here in florida, and he was, as we've been talking about all day, a protege of jeb bush. the name bush doesn't get much more establishment when you're talking about the republican party. so i think that this is probably more his comfort zone. when he's going to speak tonight, i'm told he's going to talk about the kind of thing we've heard him speak about over the past decade the american dream, his cuban roots, his cuban-american heritage the fact that they came here his family came here seeking refuge
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from castro and that the american government has to continue to be the place where we can sort of put its thumb on tyranny and help people around the world who need that kind of help. very much an interventionist sort of hawkish kind of message. in fact i just got a glimpse at his new logo. over the dot for "i" isn't a dot. it's the map of america. >> oh there you go. dana bash on the rubio watch in miami. thank you so much for the heads up. meantime, hillary clinton has also returned to the campaign trail, but no big rallies for her. call it a soft launch. this online video with a lot of so-called regular folks. she released this video announcement eight years ago as well. but that video had a much much different look. here's a sampling from back then back in 2007 and flash forward to now. >> all of us have to be part of the solution. let's talk about how to bring the right end to the war in iraq and to restore respect for
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america around the world. >> it's spring, so we're starting to get the gardens ready. my tomatoes are legendary here in my own neighborhood. >> how to end the deficits that threaten social security and medicare and let's definitely talk about how every american can have quality, affordable health care. >> i'm getting ready to do something too. i'm running for president. americans have fought their way back from tough economic times, but the deck is still stacked in favor of those at the top. >> so it was eight years ago. it was looking to the camera talk specifics. today it's every day people and broad themes like defending the middle class. is this the new populist hillary clinton? let's talk about hillary's new launch with political columnist for "the des moines register" and nia malika henderson. welcome to both of you. >> good to be here. >> hi brooke. >> kathy, let me begin with you
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since you're there on the ground in the state of iowa where hillary clinton is headed in her van from new york in i suppose less than 24 hours from now. when i think of iowa i think of the caucuses i think of 2008. it was sort of a shocker. it was like this first domino to fall. it was barack obama, then john edwards, then hillary clinton. what has changed since then? >> well you know it's a different cycle, and it's a different hillary clinton and it's a very different field. hillary clinton right now is the prohibitive front runner. she's almost the expected nominee. and she was in 2007 as well, but what happened to her was barack obama, who came in ran a very savvy iowa campaign and launched himself to the white house. at this time hillary clinton does not face the same sort of strong field that she did in 2007. but she faces an iowa problem, which is how to run a campaign here and how to do it in a way
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that doesn't make her look like the inevitable nominee or the expected nominee but someone who's really going to compete and work for every vote as she said in her video. >> okay. so perhaps still an iowa problem, but what about a perk nia? let me turn to you. you wrote about this. this is a big deal. this is the first time she's really embracing, hey, i would be making history here. i would be the first female president. >> that's right. and if you look at that video featuring a lot of women there, black women, white women, latinas as well her website the same thing, a lot of pictures of women. women dominate the sort of visuals on that website. so yes, i think she's embracing it in a way that she didn't in 2008. remember n that race obama did make history. so in that way, she didn't really have the upper hand in that argument. but now she does. and in many ways you're going to see, i think, on the republican side people notice that she's trying to be the sole woman in this campaign. you might see somebody like carley fiorina jump in to
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challenge her on that field. but i think the democratic party had often been known as the mommy party. it was sort of a derisive thing. the mommy party versus the daddy party. you see from democrats now that a lot of these issues whether it's the middle-class economics, and wrapped them in the language talk about women, talk about families talk about children. in that way, they hope to keep that gender gap that really led to so many good things for obama. >> so on that note kathie talking about women and families but also trying to have this new populous message, let's be real we're talking about the clintons here. we know bill clinton is about to be the front of "town and country" mag. here she's planning on sitting down with the people at diners in iowa. how will that message fly? >> well i think it depends on how she approaches the campaign in iowa. i think the small start, as they're talking about, it's a good approach for that. she's not going to jet in do a huge stadium speech, and jet out
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again. she actually is going to spend two days in the state. she's going to sit down with small groups and talk to people and not just talk to them but listen to them. it gives her an opportunity to start getting out on the campaign trail without having to define her entire campaign and herself in one, you know, win it or lose it speech. she has an opportunity to do it slower. and i think that speaks a lot to the strengths of campaigning, both in iowa and new hampshire, where the retail campaigns are really important. >> final question to you, nia. you hear a lot from the republicans, saying is she the anointed one, in pointing out she may not have a mega challenger. can that help or hurt her? >> yeah i think if you're hillary clinton, you talk to folks in her camp say they would like to have a challenger because she's rusty on the stump. to have someone to spar with would probably sharpen her.
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>> they would like that? >> i think they would like it. but if you talk to political scientists and look at what happens to these candidates in primary elections, they get banged up a lot. they also have to pivot and maybe go too far to the right, as we saw with mitt romney. so i'm not convinced when i talk to folks in hillary's camp that they would like very much of a challenger. maybe someone like martin o'malley. maybe somebody like bernie sanders. i don't think they want anyone certainly as strong as barack obama was in 2008 who came with his own coalition of folks. >> nia malika henderson, thank you very much. kathie i have a feeling we'll be talking to you quite a bit in the future there in des moines iowa. thank you very very much. next it is like real life "oceans 11." this massive heist, millions of dollars in jewels poof gone. surveillance video capturing these professional burglars in action and the clever disguise they used to pull it all off. twice, by the way. plus, could a police officer
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mistakenly fire his gun when he meant to pull out and fire his taser? a 73-year-old sheriffs deputy this reserve deputy in oklahoma says that's exactly what happened. this time a police body camera was rolling on the whole thing. we'll show you what happened straight ahead. you're watching cnn. (son) oh no... can you fix it, dad? yeah, i can fix that. (dad) i wanted a car that could handle anything. i fixed it! (dad) that's why i got a subaru legacy. (vo) symmetrical all-wheel drive plus 36 mpg. i gotta break more toys. (vo) the twenty-fifteen subaru legacy. it's not just a sedan. it's a subaru. photos are great... ...for capturing your world. and now they can transform it with the new angie's list app you can you can get projects done in a snap. take a photo of your project or just tell us what you need done... ...and angie's list will find a top-rated provider to do the job. start your project for free today.
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all right. this is just nuts what they pulled off. the hunt is on for this group of a thieves who carried out this brazen jewelry heist, an act that was aparentsly caught on camera. we have this newly released surveillance video for you. you see them then they're gone. first obtained by the british newspaper "the daily mirror." you can the suspects carrying bags and containers out of this vault. then you see the getaway car. at one point in time the paper uses pet names to identify six of the bandits seen in the footage. the loot by the way, likely
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worth more than $100 million. cnn's phil black has more on the heist that played out like a hollywood blockbuster. >> brooke this security video reveals a lot. it shows the planning was elaborate and thorough. the execution totally professional. it con ferms the crew was there working for days and they were long gone before anyone realized what happened. for further insight into what this video reveals, we went to experts on both sides of the law, a former bank robber and a former british detective. they agree, this was an impressive job. >> i think there's a good chance police may find some forensics in the vault area because they're in there for days rather than hours or minutes. when you're in that sort of environment, you are going to sweat because of the stress of it all. >> if you'll notice they're
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wearing white surgical-type masks over their ski masks. and that's basically to avoid dna being left. the slightest little bit of dna will be picked up. also because the forensics have not got facial mapping. >> the lock on the security gate is -- how can i describe it? i'd say it's mickey mouse. this is so well organized and well planned, it's highly likely they either had a key or they forced it somehow and once they're in if they get challenged they obviously had a strategy. >> i think they're a very professional team. they've gone in there and done what they had to do. they know the camera is there. you can tell that by the way they keep their heads down as they come through. >> i have little doubt that, you
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know a cry has gone out to the criminal underworld and someone may know who these people are. either the police will pay for that information, or they'll get the information and it may well be once they identify at least one member of the gang they'll be out to turn that person. by that i mean turn him into an informant. >> this is the kind of job you dream about. this is the job as a criminal from a criminal's perspective, this is what they call the big one. this is one you retire from. having got away with it like this, i fancy they won't be seen again. >> brooke the video doesn't show what happened underground. police say that these thieves climbed down the elevator shaft. from there, they used a high-powered drill to cut through a very thick wall leading to the vault and then getting to work on the safe deposit boxes inside. they're now trying to work out what was in those boxes, what was taken. what follows from here for the investigation is slow grinding detective work. whoever did this has a big head
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start. brooke? >> phil, thank you. larry, let me bring you in former jewel thief and author of "gangster redemption." you're an ex-con one of the biggest jewel robbers in the u.s. you spent more than a decade in federal prison but you're now a motivational speaker and talking about young people avoiding a life of crime and incarceration. you're the perfect person to talk to about this. when you hear all these details, how big, how complicated was this job in london? >> well obviously it was complicated ed complicated, but i really believe it was an inside job or they had to have inside information. think about it. if they're casing a place that long on the street there's cameras on the streets. also the first thing a robber does, brooke is have to know where or how much money or what they're going after. they're not going to go into safe deposit boxes that they don't know that there's a lot of money or diamonds or something very valuable in. so how did they know that? >> so you mention casing on the
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street but to your point, here they're apparently -- like, they disabled the elevator on the second floor, dropped down the shaft, have some kind of device where they're able to go through six feet of concrete. they knew what they were doing. how much prep work does that require? >> a lot. i mean i would do a robbery myself and it would take weeks just to plan it out, and nothing as elaborate as what they did. but again, if they didn't have inside information, brooke, it would really be impossible -- i'm waiting to see when they really take this puzzle apart and where it leads to and who it leads to. whether it's an employee there or maybe somebody who works in a store close by who can say who's coming and going with bags of jewelry, owners of jewelry stores or big stuff like that. so there has to be a connection there. they didn't just pick a jewelry place and say, hey, let's rob this place and plan it out that much. there has to be an inside connection.
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>> so not only -- and i think the word was audacious that british police used the fact they did this once they then returned for a second night to steal even more jewels. >> you know that doesn't shock me brooke because once you secure the place and you know your time frames and when cops are coming and if they got you or not, yes, you might be on edge but a professional is not going to. they already have it timed out. they know when somebody was notified. so i don't see them being that scared. i once was in a store for over 40 minutes while police were out front. so it didn't scare me. that didn't scare me. >> that didn't scare you? come on. 40 minutes with cops outside. >> well it didn't because i knew they weren't there for me. they were there for another situation. they were actually parked in front looking at a crosswalk for traffic people. but i couldn't leave the store. it didn't scare me because i had it all planned out, how i was going to get out, what my route
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was. they had this thing timed, planned. it doesn't shock me. they probably figured it would take a few days to get to the boxes they need. maybe they didn't get to the ones they thought they were going to get to in the beginning and had to come back and get those boxes, which might have been the big money. remember brooke in diamonds or jewels you could put a small amount of jewels in a bag that are worth, like you said $100 million. so it's not a cash thing. they had to know what was in some of those boxes. >> they had to know. they had to know exactly where it was. if they were this good what's the likelihood they're going to get caught? >> well, you know whenever you have this amount of people brooke and you have at minimum, they say six, i would say has to be eight to be ten people people on the outside monitoring police waves, that's just the ones they named with their nicknames. with that amount of people anything can happen. there's an old saying. two can keep a secret -- three
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can keep a secret if two are dead. i don't know what's going to happen in this situation, but i'll tell you, with that many people knowing, something can always go wrong. that's what the police are waiting for. >> that's a lot of money. larry lawton thank you -- >> you know -- >> go ahead. >> brooke you say the money. now they have to get rid of the money. if it's diamonds which they're assuming it is they have to get rid of that. they have to have a fence or there's a whole other aspect to this crime that they had to have planned out. you wouldn't do this robbery unless you had all of that planned out. and there's more people that are involved and more people that can get caught or get you caught. so i think they're going to come up with something. >> you hear about museum heists and people stealing precious paintings. you can't just roll up with a monet and expect to get money for it because somebody has to know there's something fishy there if i roll up with a really huge piece of diamond, how would they even get money for that?
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>> well, you know brooke getting rid of diamonds in the diamond business is pretty easy. let's say it's not the most upstanding business there is. they're all trying to -- you know there's a big markup on diamonds. if the guys who did this robbery, if they get 30%, so they get $30 million out of $100 million. then it goes down the chain. so you can get rid of diamonds. if i had a bag of diamonds i could get rid of a bag of diamonds easy today. rch i'll take your word for it. larry lawton appreciate your expertise. >> have a good day, brooke. >> you too. coming up next here on cnn, he said he meant to use his taser, but instead he fired his gun. the 73-year-old reserve deputy sex planing his actions that left this man dead. there on the sidewalk. the incident partly captured by this police body camera. we'll play it for you. plus a woman who escaped isis
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captivity with her three children is now sharing her story with our ara damon. how she found a cell phone and secretly called her husband and escaped in the middle of the night. she describes the fear she felt.
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a new isis propaganda video appears to confirm what iraqi and u.n. officials warned the world about last month. it purportedly shows isis militants hammering, bulldozing and blowing up parts of an
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ancient syrian city. the site is more than 3,000 years old and about 20 miles from mosul. the u.n. has called this type of attack on ancient relics quote, a war crime. isis has vowed to destroy these artifacts and idols that were worshipped instead of god. but the same group has also been looting archaeological sites to support its thriving illegal trade in antiques. a family that's experienced isis' brutality first hand and lived to tell about it is now speaking out to us here at cnn. they were taken from their home and forced to work in a massive isis prison. cnn's senior international correspondent arwa damon tells us how they managed to make it out alive. >> a suffocating fear has chased most of these yazidi refugees into iraqi kurdistan. fear not just for themselves but for their loved ones still captive with isis. those we spoke to asked we conceal their identities.
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mahmoud was not home when isis arrived in sinjar last august. the fighters took his wife three children the youngest just a month old at the time and his parents. they forced edd us at gunpoint into big trailer trucks, she recalls. they wrote everyone's name down and asked who wants to work as a farmer cleaner, or herder. the family chose to herd goats. they were taken to a village whose residents had fled and put to work. at the start, there were a lot of tears and fear but then we got used to it she says. two men who tried to escape were beaten and dragged to death behind a car. the village was their prison. for two months mahmoud did not know if his family was dead or arrive. then she found a cell phone left in the house and called him. she said, we are alive, but we
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are prisoners. one day isis fighters appeared and took her in-laws. we didn't know where they were taking them she tells us. we thought we would be next so we decided this is it. we survive or we don't. she fled with her children part of a group of 31 under cover of darkness. walking, they could only hope towards freedom. when the sun started to come up i thought, that's it we are going to get caught and what am i going to do with the kids she remembers asking herself. i can't carry all three of them and run. luckily, she never had to. the couple can't find the words to describe the moment they were reunited. but the fate of mahmoud's parents remained unknown. two days later, that question was answered. isis released 217 yazidis, many of them elderly.
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exactly why, they don't know. isis moved them around for six terrifying days before setting them free. among them were mahmoud's parents. we didn't know if they were going to slaughter us or what they were going to do with us his father says. of course i was so happy, i couldn't believe that i was in the home of the enemy facing death and then got away his mother adds. her own parents are still held by isis. she cannot escape the haunting memories of all she witnessed and went through. she was saying that the hardest moment for her in all of this was when the isis fighters began taking away the little girls, the young women, to be used as sex slaves and they would at times tear these girls away from their mothers, dragging them off by their hair as they were screaming and shouting. she was spared. i would hide or i would stay
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dirty, and i was breast-feeding she says. that is what ultimately saved her. we're told that isis slavery rules prohibit the use of women who are breast-feeding for sex. the thought of those that are is what torments her most. arwa damon, cnn, iraq. >> arwa damon, thank you. next here on cnn, another deadly police-involved shooting. a reserve deputy says he meant to use his taser but instead fired his gun. that story and the video next. plus jodi arias now knows her fate. she has been waiting nearly two years to be sentenced. two juries couldn't decide but today a judge made the call. that moment straight ahead here on cnn. aww, this audit will take days. what a headache! actually...i...don't have a headache anymore! excedrin really does work fast. in fact for some, relief starts in just 15 minutes. excedrin. wow, that was fast. when a moment spontaneously turns
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a 73-year-old reserve deputy shot and killed a suspect after he says he confused his gun for
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his taser, and it's all on tape. it happened earlier this month during a sting operation in tulsa county oklahoma. the suspect, eric harris was about to be arrested for allegedly selling an illegal weapon. you see him on this tape you see him running. we're going to play this for you. just a warning, you'll see the final moments of this man's life which is obviously disturbing in and of itself. the faces of the officers in the video have been blocked because they work undercover. here you go. >> stop right there! [ bleep ]! roll on your stomach, now! [ gunfire ] >> oh [ bleep ]! oh [ bleep ]! he shot me! he shot him, he shot him. >> stop fighting. >> he shot me!
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he shot me! >> [ bleep ]! >> oh he shot me! he shot me man! oh my god. i'm losing talked to the pio, public information office for the sheriff's office. what did he say? how did he explain this? are the. >> reporter: brooke as you were playing the videotape we got breaking news from the tulsa county district attorney office the reserve deputy man by the name of robert bates, 73 years old, will be charged with second-degree manslaughter in the shooting death that occurred during his undercover operation in tulsa, oklahoma back on april 2nd. just information that we've got over received from the tulsa
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county district attorney's office and as i'm speaking also trying to read the e-mail that came along with it. that is the main headline that this deputy has been charged with second-degree manslaughter in this case. obviously, the sheriff's department we just finished speaking with a little while ago, had recommended to the district attorney that they not -- that no charges be filed against him. this was an excusable offense in a situation that occurred given the dynamic of the dangerous situation that these deputies found themselves in. but this is -- this is just the breaking news we're getting now brooke. >> you could hear on the tape. showing pictures of this reserve officer. you hear him say, i'm sorry this is a mistake. that's the line from the investigator and this is huge telling me from the d.a.'s office charged with second-degree manslaughter. any information how this could have happened? how an officer presumably would
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be trained used an actual gun instead of a taser? >> reporter: first people need to understand the different terminologies here. mr. bates was a reserve deafty deafty -- deputy with the tulsa county sheriff's department different from a full-fledged deputy but sheriff officials he spoke to said mr. bates had gone through extensive training more than 300 hours' worth of training was a certified reserve deputy in the state of oklahoma and essentially could operate with any other law enforcement official. the ability to make arrests, work traffic stops, any capacity just like a regular deputy with the sheriff's department. the amount of training he had, and we haven't seen the full documents. we requested those, not received those yet, but there bates did not would not have gotten the
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exact amount of training that a full-fledged deputy would have had, but authorities here say that he had received extensive training and was working fully with his rights in this capacity to work in a situation like that. >> all right. you said it. over 300 hours of training ed lavandera with breaking news this reserve deputy with the tulsa sheriff's department charged with second-degree manslaughter. thank you so much for that reporting. next jodi arias back in court to learn her fate two years after being convicted. what a judge has now decided, next. easy as it gets. wouldn't it be great... ...if hiring plumbers, carpenters and even piano tuners were just as simple? thanks to angie's list now it is. we've made hiring anyone from a handyman to a dog-walker as simple as a few clicks. buy their services directly at angieslist.com. no more calling around. no more hassles. and you don't even have to be a member to start shopping today.
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what happens when marijuana meets capitalism? states like colorado are finding out now. two young entrepreneurs a site set on being marijuana moguls. a look at new original series called "high profits." >> they're prayer sitesparasites. >> contribution. preying on our family and kids and it's going to end badly. >> $100,000 cash in the back of
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the car. guys in prison for doing just what we're about to do. >> i want the breckinridge cannabis club to be a household name. >> pioneer. >> going after every resort town in colorado. >> his plan is brilliant. ♪ watch out for the dark side ♪ >> this is a big organization. >> unbelievable this happened so quickly. >> when the town erupted. >> all hell could break lose. >> we van image to protect. >> the power of the elite put the pressure on. >> everyone is playing everyone. they're going to have a target painted on their back. that is a real threat. >> there's $2 billion to be had next year. i plan to take more than my fair share. >> "high profits" series premieres sunday night at 10:00. convicted murderer jodi arias will spend the rest of her life in prison and never, ever be eligible for parole.
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the arizona judge handed down the census for the 34-year-old. arias was waiting for the ruling since the jury found her guilty of the murder of her boyfriend in 2008. the same jury could not agree whether arias should get the death penalty. >> not sufficiently substantial to call for leniency and a natural life sentence is appropriate. it is ordered the defendant shall be incarcerated in the department of corrections for the rest of her natural life with no possibility of parole. >> before the judge's ruling travis alexander's family tear tearful addressed the court and arias said she was ready to accept the worst possible outcome. >> i know you have seen the pain she put my brother through and how she smeared his name falsely falsely. and i want the pain that she put our family through -- and i hope that you can give her the max sentence you possibly can give her, because she deserves
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nothing more. >> arias said she was truly disgusted and repulsed by what she did. i'm brooke baldwin here in new york. thank you for watching. i'll be back tonight in for don lemon, meantime "the lead" starts with jake trapper right now. a hard-working grandma driving to iowa in a scooby-doo mobile. at least that's how hillary clinton wants you to see her. i'm jake trapper. this "the lead." the politics lead. after much anti-edcipated launch of her campaign how hillary clinton hopes to capture the white house in 2016. less pomp and circumstance and more down home charm. just where is her other half going to fit into the clinton campaign remix? the national league. this shocking joild captured the moment a south carolina police officer gun down a man as he attempted to run away. now a newly released video not only r